On 2019-03-24 9:25 AM, Ron wrote:
On 3/24/19 1:42 AM, Frank wrote:
Hi all

As I understand it, a  general rule of thumb is that you should never create a physical column if the data could be derived from existing columns. A possible reason for breaking this rule is for performance reasons.

I have a situation where I am considering breaking the rule, but I am not experienced enough in SQL to know if my reason is valid. I would appreciate it if someone could glance at my 'before' and 'after' scenarios and see if, from a 'gut-feel' point of view, I should proceed.


[snip]


Sure the second query joins a lot of tables, but is pretty straightforward.

What REALLY worries me is whether or not the query optimiser would look at the WHERE CASE, run away screaming and then make it use sequential scans. Thus, even query #1 would be slow.


I had not realised that. I hope someone else chimes in on this.


Is this a historical data set that's never updated, or current data that's constantly added to?


It is the latter - current data constantly added to.

Frank

Reply via email to